Basics About Matlab Matlab is a command line tool for Clojure. Features include an impressive build and test suite. Matlab has built in tests that are all tested with minimal effort. It can run simple command line tests, plus custom built libraries (both the custom library and any Java module that can be used to run these tests). Matlab is able to run in web browsers. Matlab is also great for debugging, because it can offer specific statistics in a readable format – statistics that only anyone has access to. I have no affiliation with Matlab except for that one post I wrote for the BSON blog, which talks about Matlab as their GUI (basically Java program). I had a chance to talk at a Java 3 conference last year where I showed some of the matlab documentation and also got to know a few young Clojure developers. The gist of their ideas is this: Matlab is a very slow and slow development platform. Matlab provides fast and reliable tests, you may not get much performance difference with the above comparison of testing runtimes versus what the test runs will produce. Matlab is run from a Java VM on a 64 bit platform, which is much faster than the Java VM. It is also possible to migrate your test runners (JUnit-like VM running inside of WebGL/xUnit on Windows or Java for Vista or lower) for newer builds of Matlab. What Matlab supports This is something that is pretty different for Clojure than for